You know… the one about shooting his ashes out of a Gonzo fist cannon into space after he commits suicide. The footage is from when Hunter is in his 30’s, but 30 years later… he up and went and killed himself… almost as promised.

Let’s talk about the movie for a second. Being a lit grad, and a HUGE fan of Hunter’s writing. I should tell you the movie does the book no justice. Wrong. I mean, you absolutely must read the book… but the movie is fantastic. I think it’s perfect, and could not have done better. Heck, even Hunter himself does a cameo. Probably not as an artistic endorsement so much as to score the per diem, and to keep an eye on the process. Legend goes, he was kicked off his own set for being a wasted pain in the ass. Pretty easy to believe, so I shall.

But this isn’t about that. This is about the movie, and the synopsis I read about it on Rotten Tomatoes. Of course, the movie was slammed by critics. Who cares what the critics think of a movie? Honestly, I NEVER look at that. I want to know what people thought about it. Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas has an epic discrepancy between the two, perhaps one of the biggest on all of Rotten Tomatoes. Critics gave it at 49%, where fans gave it an 89%. I would argue few people know Hunter’s writing and social impact like me. Hunter is a BIG part of why I moved to Denver, CO… to be closer to him. But this isn’t about that. No sir, this is a quick hit on the review the ‘critics’ left of the movie.

This is almost too perfect. Those words above are meant to be a slam. There is no character development. It’s a long movie… and our protagonist never grows? He never learns? He never changes his way? No sir, he does not. Hunter Thompson defined… nay… deified… that critique. He never grew up. He never sold out. He never played ball. He continued to live his life like a rich petulant 22 year old who got kicked out of the Air Force in a pretty damn funny story. Kicked out for what, you ask? Well… for behaving like a petulant 12 year old who got kicked out of school for savaging a mailbox in a pretty damn funny story. Like… for behaving like a petulant 27 year old who got fired by Time magazine for savagely attacking a candy machine (… in a pretty damn funny story).

No. Hunter never grew up, and certainly never learned from his lessons. He was, by all accounts, a terrible person. As an artist and a writer and hipster deity… the man was a genius. Take that review, and put it no on his movie. No sir, take that review and put it on his headstone.

Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. You know that already, though. Let’s mix it up, then, and say ‘Lamb: the gospel of christ according to his best friend Biff’. I really, really like this new author. Well… new to me.

Your favorite movie?

Big Fish. Re-reading over this, before I hit ‘publish’, maybe I should have said ‘Spinal Tap’. There is a 2 page diatribe down there on how great the film is, how great the actors are, and how incredible it is that they wrote and scored and improvised the film. But… you know that movie. You may not know ‘Big Fish’. It is perfect storytelling. The cinematography is stunning. Can you imagine if Tim Burton tried to make something joyful? Just for once? Well, with Big Fish, he did. Don’t worry, it still has his wife. (Shakes fist in the air). Don’t just watch the movie, just go buy it. Get it in blu-ray, too. You really want the full cinematic experience, if you can. Don’t have blu ray yet? Buy it… just for this movie.

Your favorite adaptation of a book to a movie?

Fear & Loathing in Las Vegas. So good it is freaky! Depp goes FULL Hunter Thompson in this role. Not just window dressing, either. HST was in full cooperation with the film… well… as cooperative as someone like HST could be. Depp lived with Hunter for months before the filming. They became fast and close friends. So much so that when Hunter died, Depp paid for the whole ‘launching his ashes into space from a Gonzo fist cannon that was several stories high’. Yeah, that isn’t a typo or urban legend. It happened, and all thanks to Johnny. They had a kinship all along as they are both from Kentucky.

Your least favorite adaptation ever of anything to a movie?

Being a book guy, I am always supposed to say ‘the book was better’. However, I have almost universally enjoyed adaptations of my favorite books into movies. I like to see the creativity of filmmakers trying to capture such an ephemeral thing. For example, the last ‘Alice in Wonderland’ movie with Johnny Depp. Everyone shit on it. There are good reasons to shit on it – it WAY over featured Johnny Depp, and of course since it was Burton the lead role went to his wife. He does that EVERY FUCKING MOVIE. Though my praise for Depp’s acting in ‘Fear & Loathing’ is effusive… he isn’t too good in this movie. Too hammy, just chewing up scenery being all proud of himself for looking clever. We can blame Burton for that, though.

But… I loved it (Fear & Loathing, that is). Here is why – everyone has told that story in various forms of film. It’s a classic. The Burton one, though, is a totally different telling. It takes a story never told… which is what happens if Alice goes back to that world as an adult. What happens? Who is there? Did anything, or anyone, change? Did it ever really happen? I think that is cool and creative. I haven’t seen the second one, but I will. I waited on purpose. Since it was reviewed to badly, I knew I could wait and just buy a bluray copy for $10. I like those (as opposed to just watching it on Amazon) because you get all the featurettes and behind the scenes stuff.

Your first ever novel/comic book/movie character crush?

Editors note: Long diatribe warning

The guys in Spinal Tap. I mean, it is just some British actors playing dumb, right? Not remotely! The actors are all American, and improvised the entire movie, AND wrote AND performed those songs. It went so well that the fake band accidentally became a real band. They released albums and recorded new music and even toured. If you look at all these starlets today, you see Spinal Tap was more real than any of them. Think Rhianna writes her own songs? Think she can play and instrument? Think she actually sings in concert? Spinal Tap wins on every level.

In fact, those guys went on to do more movies together, and the guys wrote an entirely new music act for ‘a Mighty Wind’, which is actually a great folk album. Got to see them live, and they played both Spinal Tap songs and a Mighty Wind songs. That movie (another Chris Guest project) was also entirely improvised.

Why do it? They are crazy rich. The bass player is 40% of the voices on the Simpsons. He probably has 100 million in the bank, and he is schlepping around from city to city playing these silly and perfect songs from 30 years ago.

My favorite thing about these guys when they did press for Spinal Tap (not known as a classic when it was released, but a stupid and pointless low budget art film)… they only did it in character. You never got to interview Chris Guest or Michael McKean or Harry Shearer. You could only talk to Derek Smalls, Nigel Tufnel, and David St Hubbins. Now… we know Chris Guest as a genius filmmaker, and Harry Shearer as most of the Simpsons. Back then, in 1980? A bunch of improve yahoos. Michael McKean was only known for playing Lenny in Laverne & Shirley.

Can you imagine how they got that film financed? “I need 5 million bucks to make a movie with these unproven and unknown actors.” Who will compose the score? Who is your screenwriter? Who is going to actually record the songs they pretend to sing? You know, like we did with the Monkeys.

Well… about that. No script. No musicians. No songwriters. No famous actors. We are just going to throw it to some improve guys. There is no screenplay, they are just going to make up the dialogue as we film. They will write the songs themselves, and play all the instruments in the recordings. It’s about a fake British heavy metal band that is washed up.”

Has that ever been done before then? Roy Scheider is quite famous for improving the line ‘you’re gonna need a bigger boat’ in Jaws. Everyone looks to that moment to prove his genius. One sentence. BFD. If it were Chris Guest’s crew, they would have made up all the dialogue, built the boat themselves… and fought a real fucking shark.

I mean, I know it is a masterpiece now… but at the time I bet they got laughed out of Hollywood. Now, hopefully, you recognize the great McKean from Better Call Saul. Jesus, is there anything these guys can’t do? Listen to ‘listen to the flower people’ and tell me that song is not as good or better than anything of that era. Also, full disclosure… I finally got my band to learn ‘Big Bottom’. We played it at our last gig.

*bonus news, the guy behind these films, Chris Guest (Spinal Tap, Best in Show, Waiting for Guffman, For your Approval, a Mighty Wind…) has a new film out soon. It’s called ‘Mascots’, and will be on Netflix soon. Like everything Larry David does, you can assume it will be all improvised, and wonderfully stupid.

Hi. Listen, I know it’s not Friday. Its not even Thursday. Allow to explain. My editor sent these to me. Apparently, he thinks it’s Thursday. He’s a great guy, so I don’t have the heart to tell him he is a day off. It’s like the thing about never waking a sleepwalker. So, maybe it isn’t a Friday – what are you a cop all the sudden?

1. What is the Best-Worst Movie Ever?

this is a very important two-way tie. I am very passionate about these movies, as you will see. The movies in question here are Gotcha, and Summer School. They both have big Hollywood casts. However, I am guessing they made about $6 box office, total. These movies did so badly that when DVDs first came out… these didn’t make the cut. It took a good 10 to 15 years for them to press these to DVD. Think of it, they had the film done. It probably cost a couple grand to remaster the movie for digital distribution. They did not bother to do that for these movies.

The cast, though, in both, is huge. Collectively, we have Mark Harmon, Anthony Edwards, Kirstie Alley, Courtney Thorne Smith, and Rob Reiner! These are funny, funny movies. They are also both infinitely quotable. In fact, I quote them a lot. Here is what’s fun. Most people quote well-known movies – like Princess Bride. Princess Bride is perhaps the most quotable movie ever. When someone comes to you with a Princess Bride quote, you come back to them with your Princess Bride quote. When I quote Summer School (written and made by Carl Reiner… the father of the guy who made Princess Pride) no one knows what I am talking about, and I sound like an idiot. Like this line. This line is goddamn cinematic gold. Scene – Mark Harmon is sitting on the porched with this golden retriever, Wondermutt. They are sharing peanut butter right out of the jar, using his fingers. He is sad because his girlfriend left. He says “you know what we need, Wondermutt? I mean, besides bread. A woman who appreciates us.”

I wish I could embed this clip, but no one has bothered to edit it out. Here is a bunch of stuff they did edit and post. Skip that, though. Rent it. No. Wait. Buy it. Seriously. Spend the $4 and buy it. If you don’t like it send it to me. I am still waiting for the four disc criterion collection and directors cut to come out. That will not happen. I wanted to pick it up on blu ray, but it doesn’t exist. wtf? This Blu Ray omission exactly makes my point that these movies are disregarded.

Sorry, I never even got to Gotcha. It deserves its own 1200 words on a movie absolutely no one gives a shit about besides me. We’ll get to that later, one day. Today, brevity is not my strong suit. I accidentally knocked out two pages on Summer School and Johnny Depp below. If I went into Gotcha, we would be here until Sunday. Rent it, though, it’s brilliant!

2. What movie have you seen in which you can tell the director knew he was a making a pos so he made it even more campy on purpose?

I can’t think of anything that terrible. well, I can actually. However, this movie was so terrible I don’t want to give it any ink. Lemme cop to something I was wrong about. I am not wrong often, but I celebrate it. I had written a review of the movie Drive. I never write movie reviews. Never once. But, I saw Drive and I was very upset and disappointed. I expected action, and chases, and maybe even dialogue. It had none of these things, and I was pissed. Then, a came back 6 months later and watched it again. Without any expectations, I really really enjoyed it. The issue was the movie was marketed poorly, and wrongly. It’s a think piece, and a slow burner. Can we also just address that Ryan Gosling is hot? Like, I would change teams for that guy hot. Like maybe a 5 or 6 on the Eggers scale hot.

I was wrong about Drive, and I apologize to you.

3. What are some films that should have been absolutely amazing, but ended up being absolutely horrible?

everything Johnny Depp has done in the last 20 years. I keep rooting for him, but all he does is shit out soulless blockbusters. Don’t give me that jive about him doing the blockbusters so he can do his art projects. He doesn’t do art projects. He was offered a super cool and interesting role doing a Whitey Bulger pic. This would be amazing, and likely Oscar material. Problem is, they didn’t have 30 million to give Depp. Even though Depp likely has about 250 million in the bank from the 13 Pirates movies.

Now that he is insanely rich and successful… why not make some art? Because, if he took that role for 2 million, that then becomes his market value. It’s like the ‘comps’ in your neighborhood when you are selling your house. Your house may be worth $500,000. But, if your neighbor has the same house and just sold it for $300K… then that is all your house is worth. Johnny, I guess, doesn’t want his neighborhood value to crumble. I did some more research, and I have actual figures. Depp makes 20 million a film. For the Bulger biopic, they offered him 10 million. 10 million dollars to do some art and get an oscar. He turned it down. Why? So he can get paid 30 million to do a Lone Ranger sequel? Depp is a hack a sell out. That hurts me to say. He bona fides are impressive. He was a close personal friend of Hunter Thompson, and spent millions paying for Thompson’s insane funeral. I love him for that. He hangs out with Tom Petty and Pearl Jam, and plays guitar. I love him for that. He chooses only terrible super high profile films, and seems only to play a caricature of an actor.

Jesus, this thing went WAY off the rails. Not sure where all the Depp anger came from, but it’s warranted. But since we are here, let’s hit another issue about Depp and my favorite book of all time. Depp did Alice in Wonderland. I love this book more than life itself. Well, your life, anyway. 🙂 This is the greatest and most important book ever. So, how did I feel about the Depp movie? Aren’t I supposed to say “the book was better?” No. here is why – the Depp movie was an imagine sequel. What happens if Alice comes back 20 years later? I love the premise, and I can guarantee Lewis Carroll would have loved it, too. I am not in love with the movie, but I don’t hate it. I admire the spirit of such a bold move. There are trillions of Alice in Wonderland remakes, but no one has tried to tell a whole new story.

Can I tell you one incredibly factoid on the book, of which there are hundreds? Alice in Wonderland is actually two separate books. The second book, “Through the Looking Glass” is a chess game. It is an actionable, executable chess game. Each movement of a character in the book relates to a specific chess move. This guy was a master published mathematician.

Can you comprehend the moral dilemma put on us by the story of the Walrus and Carpenter? You see two weird fat guys eating oysters. I did a ten page essay arguing that the Walrus is the true tragic figure. Thought he ate the most oysters, he felt bad about it the whole time. Did you know that all the stories in those books are related to fish? Do you even know what a caucus race is? Jesus, its like talking to my cat with you people.

4. Along the same lines, what is a book/story that you just know would be ruined if it were made into a film.

Lamb – a book that rocked my world. I love that book so much that I fear it could get tampered with. It would make an amazing independent movie. However, once suits and money get involved they would suck the life out of it. I truly can not say enough good things about that book. I will put my name on it. As a recovering Catholic, it spoke to me on some serious and heavy beautiful levels. Also, dig this; I wound up listening to the book on tape on Christmas day. I was driving by myself, a long drive 4 hours.

think of it. You could almost put it in the book – due to major insomnia, I was in a very strange place physically and emotionally and spiritually when I happened to have a long solitary beautiful snowy drive all by myself all day long listening to this story on audiobook. I mean to say this without hyperbole as an atheist with a gift for hyperbole > the book that day was a religious experience

5. Sharknado? Yes or No?

It’s a little too soon, bro. My father was killed by a sharknado. Is everything a joke to you people? Meet me at Cafe Friedrichstraussen

well, either Fish Called Wanda, or Princess Bride. I can play both movies pretty much without the volume and recite the dialogue. Oh, and Spinal Tap, too.

2. If you could turn one book, comic book or other print story into a feature-length movie, what story would you pick and why?

ooh, good question. A Few Seconds of Panic, from Stefan Fatsis. I wrote about it over on the ‘what I am reading’ tab. It’s a fascinating inside look, from a player, of the NFL.

3. Whom would you cast?

Giovanni Ribisi. I would cast him for almost everything. He is funny and creepy and a great actor, even though he is a Scientologist > which totally creeps me out.

4. What one movie would you like to see “updated for the year 2005”? (Ie, a remake)

I honestly never tire of iterations of ‘Alice in Wonderland’. Every version brings me entertainment. It’s the best book ever written. Also cool would be ‘Harold and Maude’ which is just an amazing amazing movie. Wait, scratch that. That movie was cast and acted so well, it shan’t be touched.

5. What one movie are you most looking forward to this year?

seeing the Rum Diary. It was already out in theaters, but I missed it since it closed after about 2 days. I love Johnny, and I really love Hunter. The Rum Diary was Hunter’s first book, long before all that “fear and loathing” stuff.

* updated 5.29.2013 – see bottom

Well, I just found out minutes ago that Hunter S Thompson is dead. This is terrible news for me because he was a god to me. I am sad and torn and will deal with this the way I deal with everything – writing to you about it.

Really, no one can be surprised by news of Hunter’s death. Hunter lived a long a very crazy life… you know that. What is a freakish surprise to me is the news is it was a suicide. What the fuck is that about, Hunter? It seems a cowardly way to go for such a brave and fearless man. For the last month I have been reading his last tome ‘Kingdom of Fear’. I was on the web writing about Hunter on Blogcritics this afternoon (before I knew about his death). It was just today… about 6 hours ago I typed his very line “Hunter Thompson is the greatest living American writer”.

Lemme tell you about my attachment and love of HST. If you have a working browser (like Mozilla) you have seen a black fist that says ‘Gonzo’ on the left under the links. That was an homage to Hunter for my site. In college, I had vanity plates on my Honda that said ‘Lono’. This is a Hunter Thompson reference as well. Hunter is one of the reasons I moved to Colorado, seriously. I wanted to meet him, and knew eventually I would make my way to Woody Creek Tavern for an unpleasent drunken exchange with the man. In fact, if you could see that Atlas we used to drive to Colorado about 9 years ago… there is only one pen mark on the Colorado page. I circled Woody Creek to show my wife where Hunter lived, and where we would subsequently be stalking.

I am pleased to say I did get to finally see him in person. A year or two after we moved here he did a speaking engagement at the Fox Theatre in Boulder. It was a classic Hunter experience, and I was able to ask him a question personally. I’d have to say I am somewhere in the ‘denial’ stage still about this news. I keep refreshing my google news search engine every few minutes hoping to see the word ‘hoax’ somewhere. It hasn’t happened yet. There will be a million pages and writings dedicated to Hunter over the coming weeks and months. However, there is only one good internet site dedicated to Hunter for years, it is Christine’s ‘Great Thompson Hunt’ and that is where you should go for pictures and articles and news.

You see my sig file and e mail address? They are the name ‘Lono’. I own that name in almost every domain over the years (ATT, Us West, MSN, Hotmail, & Mindspring). This is all a reference to one of Hunter’s greatest books ‘The Curse of Lono’. I am sure I will have more to say about this, much much more. For now, at 11 pm Colorado time, the news has only been public for about an hour. The details are chillingly few: Hunter Thompson found dead of apparent self inflicted gunshot wounds, found by his son Juan.

You all know about Roy if you are here often enough. This is what Roy wrote to the group this evening about this news: This is sad and a loss I put equal to the death of John Lennon. So perhaps you can see why Roy and I are so close. In fact, I just remember Hunter is the REASON I met Roy. Roy had one of the good doctor’s books at his desk at work and it caught my eye. Knowing anyone who reads Hunter is good people, we struck up a conversation. If it weren’t for that book, I probably wouldn’t know or subsequently care about my very good friend Roy.

PT 2, written about an hour (and three drinks) later

The last piece I wrote about Hunter was ironically titled ‘Hunter S Thompson, still alive‘ That was back in August. I knew one day Hunter would be gone and we’d all sit and talk about how great he was. I didn’t want to wait until he was dead for people to appreciate him… so I reached out. Hunter was like Jerry Garcia, you just know neither was ever going to live out a full life to old age. I miss them both so much.

I also want to say this. We all knew Hunter could go any day. What I expected was a headline like this “Gonzo journalist shot by police after consuming hundreds of hits of LSD and attempting to paint murals on Aspen police cars” or something cool and strange like that. I guess I wanted an Easy Rider type ending… a martyr who fought to the end.

* update 5.29.2013

I see a ton of recent interest in this piece, so I thought I would update what we know about the whole incident. It was a suicide, and it was pre-medidated. I believe it was pre-medidated because the week before, he asked Bob Braudis to come and remove all the dynamite from his property. There was also a suicide note and a half. On his typewriter when he shot himself was the single word typed out ‘counselor’. I can’t pretend to know what that means. Later, though, we found what clearly appears to be a suicide note. It is called ‘football season is over’ and is copied here in it’s entirety.

“Football Season is Over

No More Games. No More Bombs. No More Walking. No More Fun. No More Swimming. 67. That is 17 years past 50. 17 more than I needed or wanted. Boring. I am always bitchy. No Fun — for anybody. 67. You are getting Greedy. Act your (old) age. Relax — This won’t hurt.”

Here is where things get strange, though. The night before, he called Ralph Steadman and left a long and rambling message (which is par) about a project. He wasn’t speaking in generalities, though. He described to Ralph a specific piece of art he wanted done on GW Bush. What is also strange is who was around. When Hunter shot himself, his son Juan, and his grandson (Juan’s kid) were in the house. They heard the shot. Juan described it as ‘a bookshelf falling’, initially thinking nothing was amiss. What is also strange is he had his wife, Anita, on the phone when he did it.

There have also been stories about Hunter and Anita being on the rocks when this happened. Some have also said there is a battle for the estate, and the will was changed or set to be changed away from Anita’s name. It would not suprise me if their marriage was on the rocks. Hunter was psychotic and mean, and I would not be surprised if he had a strong mysoginistic side. I do not believe the family is at war. if they were, it would be Juan vs Anita. After Hunter died, I spent time with them both, and I saw absolutely no signs of any kind of battle. One would also imagine the battle would be over money. There was no money. Hunter couldn’t save, and remember he hadn’t done much great writing in 25 years. His legendary ranch wasn’t even paid off. Raplh Steadman was kind enough to do that after he passed, and basically handed it to Anita (this is just my understanding and perception, but I believe it to be true). Anita still works part time carrying on the Gonzo name in publishing and keeping up the estate. She also opened a ‘Gonzo Store’ online that sells HST goods. So, obviously she has not been sued out of the family. Having not heard online from Anita in several months (her website has been down for some time), I reached out to Ralph Steadman (via Facebook, isn’t technology great) and he replied Anita is fine and still engaged in the business of HST.

Again, this proves to me there is no rift in the Thompson family. If there was, I would absolutely assume that Ralph would side with Juan, who he watched grow up.

There is also the business of the ‘Gonzo Foundation’. It has a website, but hasn’t done anything or been updated in at least a year. Something tells me that Anita has dropped out of being Hunter Thompson’s widow for a bit. I expect she will be back.

In the interest of fairness, there is a small and bizarre movement of people who believed Hunter was killed by those friendly to the Bush world for his criticism of the Bush govt. I can tell you I don’t believe with a single cell in my body this is true. I can’t imagine the Bushies were terrified of the ramblings of an ‘elderly dope fiend’ (this is how Hunter referred to himself) who wrote about shotgun golf for ESPN. By the way, great piece, and one of his last. Read it here.

There is a good bit of unreleased HST materials to be accounted for. Most famously is the book ‘Polo is my Life’. Hunter was working on that on and off for at least a decade before he died. I am not sure if that will ever see the light of day. I personally talked to Anita on a couple of occasions and offered to edit it and help put it together. I never heard back from her, but imagine many crazies offered the same thing… I don’t know. She did give me what I thought was her personal email, but I later found out it was a decently public one that you could find online with ten minutes of google work. Johnny Depp bought up all of Hunter’s unfinished work and scraps and donated it all to a University. I forgot which one.

In closing, the most hopeful thing for me is that Anita said she wanted to open up Owl Farm to the public. I know she hasn’t changed or touched anything since he was alive. At least, she hadn’t as of a couple of years ago. One of the big reasons I moved to Colorado was to make it to Owl Farm. So, eventually that will come true. Right?

So, why did he do it? He was in terrible physical shape and confined to a wheelchair. His body was deteroriated from age and drugs and alcohol, and he was keenly aware the fun was over.

I might clarify I am (sadly) in no formal way connected with the family or authorized to speak on anyone’s behalf. I am simple the biggest HST fan. When Hunter passed, I was living (as I still do) in Denver. So, I got to go to a TON of events they had memorializing Hunter, doing film junkets, etc.

I was going to tell this riveting true tale about how I was inadvertently on a Johnny Depp movie set in Wells, England and didn’t even know it until I was two cities away. I could have run into Johnny Depp, but didn’t. It’s an interesting story, really… but not one worth me typing up and you reading. I have pictures to prove it though.

oh really, well sorry to bore you. Why don’t you tell us all your Johnny Depp story? That’s what I thought.